› johnny@sfbg.com
No one turns the tables on the turntable quite like Otomo Yoshihide. San Francisco is a renowned turntablist holy land, thanks to the Return of the DJ comps David Paul has put out on Bomb Records, and the stylus-stylish feats of Q-Bert and the Invisibl Skratch Picklz. Yet the most audio-inventive and visionary SF-set turntable achievements to date probably reside within the new CD-DVD Multiple Otomo (Asphodel), largely recorded during the artist’s recent Bay Area visit. There, Otomo attacks the turntable’s potential for sound from dozens of wholly inventive angles, playing it as a musical instrument rather than using it as a piece of stereo equipment. Vinyl isn’t a necessary ingredient. Otomo shows a system that broadcasts music can also be used to make music. He turns an outmoded machine inside out and invents it anew.
Such praise for Multiple Otomo, while based in truth, likely means little to its chief creator. Whether he’s recording, engaged in sampling, or warping the parameters of live performance, he’s expressed little interest in consumer products and little regard for music that subjugates itself to words.
Nonetheless, the audio-only component of Multiple Otomo, Monochrome Otomo, is a CD of 18 tracks, each of which has a title and all of which trigger a writer’s descriptive imagination through their sonic properties. "Generator and Records" tracks rhythms of crackle albeit with even less interest in pop repetition than snap-crackle-pop contemporaries such as Ryoji Ikeda and Thomas "Klick" Brinkmann. "Turntable Feedback" sculpts rusty, serrated chunks of cacophony with an authority that noise guitarists such as Nels Cline might covet. "Records" sounds like an infernal engine attempting to come back to life. Discarded technology doesn’t possess soul, but Otomo excavates soul from it. "Cardboard Chip Needle" features howls and horn squawks that are equivalent to nails on a chalkboard in terms of primal abrasiveness, yet Otomo a free jazz heir of Masayuki Takayanagi, whose guitar assaults once famously caused student radicals to riot against him also can use a six-stringed electric as a steel drum of sorts and create a gorgeously spooky, Harry Partchlike journey into a night forest.
But rather than chart new shades of purple with simile and metaphor, it might be better or at least less silly to use analogy when discussing Multiple Otomo. One track on the CD portion, "Cut Records," possesses a quality that isn’t far from what Peter Tscherkassky does on film: what might be the soundtrack to an old movie sounds like it’s fighting to escape the broken stereo that traps it. As Tscherkassky does in his mind-blowing celluloid reworks of Sidney J. Furie’s The Entity, Otomo taps into the convulsive properties of his media (equipment) and his medium.
One of Otomo’s behind-the-camera collaborators on the frequently awesome DVD portion of Multiple Otomo is filmmaker Michelle Silva of San Francisco’s Canyon Cinema, who has a definite appreciation of Tscherkassky. Like Tscherkassky, Otomo is the type of experimental artist whose work is directly pure and powerful rather than arcane or deliberately hard to understand. The visual component of Multiple Otomo is intimate with Otomo’s methods. Semiabstract close-ups rule, and Otomo’s hands get into all kinds of trouble. Indeed, Otomo is frequently multiplied, as the title promises, but he’s also got a trickster’s proficiency for disappearing from the scene.
In addition to textural visual splendor overlays, scratched surfaces, kaleidoscopic reflections, screens within screens, the hypnotic spinning dances of fluorescent records, the hot, tarlike gleam of burning black vinyl there are numerous humorous treats within some of Multiple Otomo‘s DVD chapters. While many of Otomo’s activities are a retro audiophile dude’s worst nightmare come to life, "Vinyls" is also playfully disrespectful in its approach to the collector mentality, putting an Al Green Hi Records classic through tortures while ultimately saving the worst violence for Evita and Supertramp. (Ah, sweet justice.) Though Otomo frequently proves you don’t need records to play a record player, on "Tinfoil," two bits of the titular object begin to resemble the legs of a dancer with an extreme case of the jitters.
Frankly, any object that finds itself near the hands of Otomo Yoshihide should have a case of the jitters. It’s bound to discover that its end justifies his means. *
www.japanimprov.com/yotomo
› superego@sfbg.com SUPER EGO Tweet-tweet twitter. Tweet. It’s 6 a.m., and I think I just asked a mailbox for a light. Nonetheless, it was a cute and sturdy one, unlike the male boxes I usually encounter stumbling home from Nob Hill in the way-wee hours and at least I got that light. Right? Twoot-twitter. Twoot-twitter. I’m pitching and reeling contentedly, mind from my new favorite little alcoholic hideaway, Writers Vice Lounge, in the cushy Hotel Rex, which looks and feels like a cocktail bar that crashed through the roof of an Ivy League library. Thus it combines two of my most beloved interests: tipple and antiquities. Plus, it’s right off the hotel lobby, so there’s all the bookish tourist trade one can handle. Therefore, my glorious exit at dawn. Now if only I could … Trr-eet! Trrr-eet! Twoodle-oo! Twoo! What the fuck is that noise?!? I raise one gentle, half-gloved hand to my coif, wherein I feel a slight and unkind tugging. Jesus Maria. There’s a freaking bird in my hair. I come from Detroit, the ne plus ultra of OCD hairometry. Amazing Motor City salons: Total Clips of the Heart, We Be Cuttin’ Hair and Stuff, and the tip-top, Charlene’s, a raucous, 24-hour bob-and-weave joint downtown. (There’s nothing on this earth like a salon full of Detroit girls lit up like a Christmas tree in that city’s postapocalyptic twilight). I was raised amid the black tradition of Hair Balls, in which scissor queens battled out their latest looks onstage, and preposterous topiary shark cages, UFOs, Mount Rushmore arose from the scalps of models whose asses had long ago fallen asleep. RuPaul would weep. So it was a damn shame I’d let my beehive become a bird’s nest. The Bay’s got its fair share of fabu hairdoers too, from the superslick Chicago Barber Shop chain to the superglam Glamorama. But until now, you couldn’t legally order a cocktail with your cut at any of them. What good’s a clip without a (noncomplimentary chardonnay) sip? So I pounced on the new MR., San Francisco’s first fully liquor-licensed salon. Pardon me, barbershop. The friendly owners, Kumi and Sean, work hard to make it known that their gorgeous outfit in the Financial District is meant to hark back to the comfy hood hair joints of yore, for "real guys who want to enjoy themselves, get a quality cut, relax, and can handle a little smack from the rest of the guys." If that "smacks" a bit of Metrosexual 2.0, then March Madness on the giant gilt-framed hi-def in the main room, the array of GQ accessories for sale at the bar, and the available treatment packages titled "Hitter," "Player," and "Mogul" clinched it for me. I even dressed metrosexual to go there! Black Kangol hat, stretchy silver poplin Banana Republic shirt, and a quick spritz of Axe. I was going in June 2000 and coming out Entourage, dammit. Now where’s my frickin’ chocotini? Thing is, MR. is pretty fab even to the testosterone challenged like myself. After conducting three years’ worth of interviews around the country with "real guys," the owners have planned everything to a tee from the average preferred height of the mirrors to the angular relation of the barber chairs to one another. Real guys are so anal! Soon Kumi and Sean will launch a 360-degree computer modeling program that will allow patrons to save their favorite haircuts to the MR. database. (Too bad the name CyberTrim’s already taken). And in a delicious switch, ladies can toss back brewskis at the bar while their real guys get all gussied up. I fell in love with Shirley, the utterly sweet shampoo girl, and swooned over barber Nick Calvanese aka. Nicky the Barber a Rat Packloving transplant from South Philly with slicked-back hair and a straight razor tattooed on his chest. But real guys don’t swoon at least not when the other guy’s holding scissors. In the end, I looked great. I walked out feeling if not exactly Jeremy Piven, then at least somewhat David Beckham. Yay for feeling David Beckham! Now, which Pussycat Doll should I boink? * WRITERS VICE LOUNGE Daily, 5:30 p.m.late Hotel Rex 562 Sutter, SF (415) 433-4434 MR. Mon.Fri., 8 a.m.10 p.m.; Sat.Sun., 10 a.m.10 p.m. 560 Sacramento, SF (415) 291-8812 >
Scissor twister